AUTHOR:
ABIGAIL ROUX
Pages:
349
Date:
12/03/2014
Grade:
5
Details:
No. 7 Cut & Run
Own
/ Kindle
The
blurb:
“After
having their faces plastered across the news during a high-profile case, FBI
Special Agents Ty Grady and Zane Garrett have become more useful to the Bureau
posing for photo ops than working undercover. Just as Zane is beginning to
consider retirement a viable option, Ty receives a distress call from a friend,
leading them to a city rife with echoes from the past.
New Orleans wears its history on its streets, and it’s the one place Ty’s face could get him killed. Surrounded by trouble as soon as they land, Ty and Zane are swiftly confronted with a past from which Ty can’t hide—one with a surprising connection to Zane’s.
As threats close in from all directions, both men must come to terms with the lives they’ve led and the lies they’ve told. They soon discover that not all their secrets are out yet, and nothing lasts forever.”
New Orleans wears its history on its streets, and it’s the one place Ty’s face could get him killed. Surrounded by trouble as soon as they land, Ty and Zane are swiftly confronted with a past from which Ty can’t hide—one with a surprising connection to Zane’s.
As threats close in from all directions, both men must come to terms with the lives they’ve led and the lies they’ve told. They soon discover that not all their secrets are out yet, and nothing lasts forever.”
----------------------------------------------------------
My
thoughts:
Well...Okay...Wow...I
mean...
Just
bear with me while I catch my breath and try to find the words I need to write
this review because...Jaysus what a book.
In
my review of ‘Stars & Stripes’ I
said that while I liked that book and enjoyed my time with Ty and Zane it
missed the WOW-factor for me because the relationship element of the story was
just too smooth and – shock horror - wasn’t angsty enough. Well, in a perfect
example of ‘be careful what you wish for because you might just get it’ this
book made up for that lack of angst...and then some. In fact, I’m not sure ‘angst’
is the right word to describe everything that happens between Ty and Zane; all
out warfare might be a better description.
Ty
and Zane find themselves in New Orleans. And while this place holds happy
memories for Zane, it is not somewhere Ty should be. When he was pulled out of New
Orleans after spending two years there while undercover, he left a lot of
unresolved issues and enemies behind. Issues and enemies that seem to know he’s
back and are determined to bring him down once and for all.
And
it is not just Ty’s past haunting him. Zane’s undercover past has descended on
New Orleans as well and appears to match Ty’s when it comes to their need for
vengeance. It soon becomes clear that Ty and Zane’s pasts are far more
interwoven than Zane could ever have expected. The revelation that Ty has been
keeping secrets from him for the past two years despite their, apparently strengthening,
relationship crushes Zane. During the ensuing fight things are said and done
that can never be taken back, leaving both investigators teetering on the edge
while various groups are still out to kill them. It also becomes clear that
someone is relaying information to their enemies. This may be one investigation
too far for this couple; even if they manage to survive the attempts on their
lives, their relationship may well be beyond repair.
This
was, at times, a very hard book to read. The passages where Zane and Ty fight
nearly broke my heart because it was so easy to understand both men’s point of
view. The betrayal Zane felt made as much sense as Ty’s conviction that he had
been doing the right thing all along. And that is the reason this particular
version of angst didn’t upset me or put me off the book. I’ve read too many
romances in which the issues between the two main characters seems contrived;
only there because the author needed something to create tension. In this case
it all made sense; not just in the context of this book but in relation to the
story-line over all seven books. And while that didn’t make the whole mess any
easier to read, it did get me even more involved with and attached to these two
investigators.
There
was one instance of coincidence in this book that went a bit too far for me. It
seemed very unrealistic and I could see it coming a mile off. Having said that,
it also brought me an ‘ah, isn’t that sweet’ moment in what was, otherwise, a
tough and heartbreaking story, so I won’t hold it against the author.
Ty
and Zane have over the past year or so joined the very small and select group
of favourite fictional characters. They have become almost real in my head; I
find myself dreaming about them and can easily imagine meeting them face to
face. This doesn’t happen very often and I’m delighted every time I am lucky
enough to stumble upon an author with the power to make their world real for me.
I think it is safe to say that Abigail Roux has found a life-long fan in this
reader.
My
favourite quote from this book:
““Who
are you Ty?” Ty smiled against his cheek. “I was an assassin”, he whispered. “I’m
a marine. I’m the man who doesn’t miss. And I’m yours.” Zane bit his lip on a
smile. “Who are you Zane?” Zane cocked his head. “I’m an artist. I’m a geek.”
He felt Ty smile. “I’m one badass motherfucker on a motorcycle.” Ty began to
laugh. Zane dipped his head until they were staring into each other’s eyes. “And
I’m yours.”
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